The Appearance of Vortices in Protoplanetary Disks in Near-Infrared Scattered Light
Metea Marr, Ruobing Dong

TL;DR
This study models how vortices in protoplanetary disks appear in near-infrared scattered light, providing observable signatures to confirm their presence and implications for planet formation.
Contribution
It combines hydrodynamic and radiative transfer simulations to predict the near-infrared appearance of vortices, linking theoretical models with observable features in disks.
Findings
Vortices can appear as bright arcs in near-infrared images.
Vortices cast shadows that can be detected in scattered light.
Observed features in HD 34282 match vortex predictions.
Abstract
Azimuthally asymmetric structures have been discovered in millimeter continuum emission from many protoplanetary disks. One hypothesis is that they are vortices produced by the Rossby wave instability, for example at edges of planet-opened gaps or deadzones. Confirming the vortex nature of these structures will have profound implications to planet formation. One way to test the hypothesis is to compare the observed morphology of vortex candidates in near-infrared scattered light with theoretical expectations. To this end, we synthesize the appearance of vortices in H-band polarized light by combining hydrodynamic and radiative transfer simulations of the Rossby wave instability at a deadzone edge. In a disk at 140 pc, at the peak in its evolution a vortex at 65 au may appear as a radially narrow arc 50% - 70% brighter compared with an axisymmetric disk model. The contrast depends on the…
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